Garcia v. State

156 S.W. 939, 70 Tex. Crim. 485, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 306
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1913
DocketNo. 2419.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 156 S.W. 939 (Garcia v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garcia v. State, 156 S.W. 939, 70 Tex. Crim. 485, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 306 (Tex. 1913).

Opinions

*487 DAVIDSON, Presiding Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, his punishment being assessed at eight years confinement in the penitentiary.

The evidence briefly stated is that all the parties to the transaction were Mexicans. The killing occurred at night. Appellant had been sent by his father with a sausage mill and Winchester rifle to a friend of his father. This friend wanted a sausage mill to use in making sausage as he purposed killing hogs. The gun was sent without request, and was accounted for in this way: On the previous year this friend of appellant’s father had considerable trouble in killing a hog which was wild and this for want of a gun. This matter had been mentioned by the friend to appellant’s father, and thinking this friend might need the gun he had instructed his son, appellant, to carry the gun with him on this occasion. En route from his father’s home to his father’s friend he met deceased and another Mexican named Feroba. The State’s view of the case is that upon the meeting appellant said to the deceased, Cabasos, “I have got you where I want you,’’ or a similar expression. That as Cabasos was alighting from his horse appellant shot him in the shoulder a little in the rear of his side. There had been trouble between the parties previously. The deceased had used very insulting language, calling appellant and his brother “cabarons,” which the witnesses say is the most insulting language known to the Mexican tongue. There is also testimony to the effect that deceased had said that there would be trouble whenever he and appellant met. There was some testimony of a similar nature which it is deemed unnecessary to recapitulate. •Appellant’s version of the homicide was substantially as follows: That in obedience to the instructions of his father he was carrying the sausage mill and gun to Crecencio Benito, the friend of his father to which allusion is above made. En route he met Feroba and deceased on the road. Feroba spoke and said good evening. Appellant answered him and said good evening. Feroba then asked, <rWhere are you going?” Appellant told him he was going to Crecencio Benito to leave a sausage mill that his father was sending. Feroba then told him to get off his horse and talk to them, at which time he grabbed the reins of appellant’s horse. Appellant informed him that he did not have time to converse with him; that his father had told him not to stop on the road, but to keep going. Feroba told him two or three times that he wanted to talk with him, and appellant says he thought they were not going to have any trouble and he got down from his horse. Dpcn getting down Feroba commenced hitting him in the breast, and the other man, deceased, commenced cutting him in the back. He says, “I told them I did not want any trouble with them and they told me they would have to kill me. They had backed me off some eight or ten yards from my horse fighting me and ¡Refugio was going to my horse and I ran over and snatched him away from him.” When appellant pushed Feroba back, deceased was coming upon him, whereupon he snatched his Winchester from his horse and shot. During the fight appellant *488 was cut in the shoulder behind. The scar was exhibited to the jury, and the physician who attended appellant testified also to the fact that there was a stab in the shoulder, which he described as being one and one-half or two inches long and about one and one-half or two inches deep. The contention of the State in this connection was that appellant cut himself in the shoulder, the idea of the State being that he was manufacturing a defense. There seems to be, however, no testimony to sustain this further than the fact that the physician testified that the wound was in such place that appellant might have used the knife and cut himself at that point as he could have done on most any other portion of his body. This is a sufficient statement of the facts.

The charge on manslaughter is criticised as being insufficient, and fatally so. The court gave the statutory definition of passion, and informed the jury that an assault and battery by the deceased causing pain and bloodshed is adequate cause. Then gave a general charge that although the provocation causing sudden passion must arise at the time of the killing, it was the duty of the jury in determining the adequacy of the provocation to consider all the facts and circumstances in evidence, etc. Applying the law to the case, the court instructed the jury that if they should find beyond a reasonable doubt “that the defendant, with a deadly weapon, in a sudden passion arising from an adequate cause, as the same has been hereinbefore explained, and not in defense of himself against an unlawful attack, real or apparent, producing a reasonable expectation or fear of death or serious bodily injury,” etc., “you will find him guilty of manslaughter.” Several grounds of objection are urged to this charge. The court was in error in not charging the jury the law of manslaughter applicable to the combined assault of deceased and Feroba. The court limited the provocation and the right of appellant on the charge of manslaughter alone to the acts of the deceased. Appellant’s theory of the case, and his testimony was to the effect, that they both attacked him, and through the demand or request of Feroba he was induced to alight from his horse, believing there would be no trouble; that there was a combined assault upon him by the two. From appellant’s theory the two parties were acting together. This being true, the-act of one is the act of the other, and manslaughter should have been so charged. See Branch’s Criminal Law, section 512. Mr. Branch thus aptly states the proposition: “The charge must not confine adequate cause to the acts of deceased if there is evidence that another is acting with deceased,” citing Byrd v. State, 39 Texas Crim. Rep., 609; Stacy v. State, 48 Texas Crim. Rep., 95; Brown v. State, 54 Texas Crim. Rep., 121.

It is also contended that the court erred in limiting the provocation as was done in the charge to one person, and nowhere in the charge correcting it. That part of the charge is as follows: “The act musk be directly caused by the passion arising out of the provocation. It is not enough that the mind is merely agitated by the passion arising from some other provocation, or a provocation given by some other person *489 than the party killed.” The contention is, this is inapplicable to the facts and not the law of this case. This contention is correct. While the usual rule is that the provocation of some other person than the deceased can not be used in manslaughter, yet that does not mean a provocation of more than one party when the parties are acting together. Where two or more are acting together it is not, legally, the provocation of some other person, nor is it in fact. It is the provocation of either and both of the parties who are so acting. Under such state of case both parties are giving the provocation, and without some such explanation of the law to the jury they would believe and doubtless did believe that under the charge given the provocation by Feroba could not be considered by them, or the fact that he was acting with deceased could not be considered by them under the charge of manslaughter. Appellant had the legal right to have the law of manslaughter charged from the standpoint of an attack from both Feroba and deceased. This was a case made by the defendant’s evidence. In fact, it was a case on this state of facts.

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 939, 70 Tex. Crim. 485, 1913 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garcia-v-state-texcrimapp-1913.